An anti-deportation protester who dared Attorney General Pam Bondi to arrest him for crashing a Sunday church in Minnesota is now in custody, Bondi said Thursday.
William Kelly was seen on video with a crowd invading and loudly disrupting a service at Cities Church in St. Paul over allegations that the pastor worked for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Bondi described the protest as an attack on congregants’ religious liberty and announced multiple related arrests, including Kelly’s, in Thursday X posts.
“So, you know, Pam Bondi, you want to come and arrest me? You want to come and give me charges? So be it,” Kelly previously said in a video interview after the Sunday protest.
READ: Feds Arrest BLM Suspects In Storming Of Minnesota Church
“Ok,” Bondi responded in a Thursday post.
Kelly is charged with conspiracy to deprive rights and violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, a law that criminalizes obstructing houses of worship and other facilities, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said on X. Her post showed an image of masked federal agents restraining Kelly while he wore a “F*ck Trump” beanie and a yellow vest.
“As you can see, all these pretend Christians, all these comfortable white people who are living lavish, comfortable lives while children are dragged into concentration camps…” Kelly shouted at churchgoers during the Sunday protest, footage shows. The anti-ICE mob remained in the church after a pastor asked them to leave for disrupting the service.
READ: Federal Judge Blocks Move To Charge Don Lemon Over Minnesota Church Protest
Kelly faces separate disorderly conduct charges over a December incident at the White House, where he was accused of harassing police, pedestrians, and families waiting in line for a tour, court records show. He allegedly followed, filmed, and heckled the victims, calling them Nazis and yelling obscenities.
Earlier on Thursday, Bondi also announced the arrests of race activists Nekima Levy Armstrong and Chauntyll Louisa Allen in the Minnesota church case.
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